this?”
“No. But it
“Roger that. We’ll be all right.”
The Coast Guard chopper approached again, this time with its side door racked open and a rescue diver seated with his legs dangling into space. When they were one hundred yards off the port beam of the wallowing derelict, and at an altitude of thirty feet, the diver slid from his perch and dropped like an arrow into the churning ocean. The helo immediately swept farther away to make the swim easier for their man. Max and his team took this opportunity to remove the hydraulic ram they’d installed and surreptitiously dump it overboard. With the air hose already retracted aboard the
The diver reached the side of the
“Master Chief Warren Davies,” the man said as he pulled off his fins and attached them to a belt slung around his wet suit.
“Captain Ramon Esteban.”
“What’s the situation, Captain?”
“This is a luxury boat,” Juan said with a melodious Spanish accent. “I think it was hit by a rogue wave and obviously capsized. We were on our way to Nassau when we spotted the wreck. Two men had been thrown into the water, but we found them on the hulk. They told us that they heard banging from inside the hull. We used a torch from our ship to cut our way in and found all these people. We were about to move them into one of our lifeboats, but we are having trouble with the davit controls.”
Juan pointed to the
“That shouldn’t be a problem so long as this tub stays afloat,” Davies said. “Our cutter will be here soon. What about injuries?”
“We are assessing that now. You have medical training?”
“Tons. Let’s go check on the survivors.”
For the next half hour, Cabrillo played the part of concerned captain, all the while knowing his quarry was getting farther and farther away. Via walkie-talkie he got regular updates from Max, but idling in the area was driving him nuts. Finally, the
They quickly beached themselves on the
“Captain Ramon Esteban.”
“Master Chief Davies has already filled us in on what you’ve accomplished. Damn fine piece of work, Captain.”
“I loved the
“You said this was caused by a rogue wave?”
“Yes, we experienced it ourselves. A real monster that came out of nowhere. We were bow on to it, but I suspect this vessel took it broadside.”
“Strange, because we’ve contacted local shipping and no one reported any rogue waves.”
Cabrillo lightly tapped the hull with his boot. “I think this is evidence enough, don’t you?”
“Yeah, I guess you’re right.”
Coasties began loading litters with the worst injured into the inflatables for the quick ride back to the cutter. The rest of the survivors, cold and miserable, waited their turn on the shrinking hulk. Each minute saw the ocean eat up another few inches of deck space as the derelict continued to sink. Cabrillo’s mind flashed to the painting of the survivors of the wreck of the
It took two more trips to evacuate the rest of the survivors. As they’d worked out earlier, the Emir gushed over Cabrillo’s heroism and vowed to make him a rich man for saving his life. Cabrillo in turn acted the hardened sea veteran and said it was his duty and could not take financial reward for doing the right thing. This was all played out for the Coast Guard’s benefit, and it seemed that Taggard bought the act. He didn’t ask to board the
The two shook hands, and while the Coasties returned to their cutter, Cabrillo and his team returned to the
Only then could they go after the stealth ship being pursued by MacD and Eddie in the RHIB. Cabrillo was still in the shower when he felt the engines spool up and the ship begin to pour on the power. They’d lost several hours on their target, and it felt as though Max intended on making it up as fast as possible. Ten minutes later, dressed in jeans and a Norwegian roll-neck sweater, Cabrillo entered the op center.
“How are our boys?” he asked, taking his command seat.
“Still in pursuit,” Max replied.
“What’s their fuel status?”
“If we can maintain forty knots, we’ll reach them when they still have an hour’s reserve.”
“That’s a bit tighter than I like,” Juan remarked. “If we’re delayed, they’ll need to break off the chase so they don’t run out.”
“Not much we can do about that,” Hanley said. “Coasties took their time reaching the wreck. Could’ve been worse if they’d wanted to board us and go over our papers.”
Juan didn’t reply. What so concerned him was that in these seas, his men needed to keep headway in the RHIB to avoid being swamped by a wave. If their fuel load dropped to a certain point, they would need to slow down to stretch out their time under power. That meant letting the stealth ship escape.
Over the next hours, Cabrillo sat wordlessly drinking coffee while the plot showing the
It was well past dusk when they had closed to within twenty miles of the RHIB and thus about twenty-one from the stealth ship. Juan judged they were close enough to have MacD and Eddie break off and return to the
“Hali, open a line to Eddie.”
Hali Kasim, at the communications station, had been waiting for this for hours and had a channel open in